PsA Overview - Rash's Arthritic Kin
- Definition: Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA) is a chronic, inflammatory spondyloarthropathy occurring in individuals with psoriasis.
- Link to Psoriasis: Skin or nail psoriasis usually precedes PsA onset, often by years.
- Prevalence: Affects ~0.3-1% of the general population.
- Age of Onset: Typically between 30-50 years.
- Sex Ratio: M:F is approximately 1:1.
⭐ A significant proportion, up to 30%, of psoriasis patients eventually develop PsA.
Pathogenesis & Clinical Types - Immune Mayhem & Joint Tales
- Immunopathogenesis: Key cytokines TNF-α, IL-17, IL-23 drive inflammation. Genetics: HLA-B27 (axial), HLA-Cw6 (psoriasis).
- Clinical Patterns (📌 Mnemonic: "A DAMP S" - Asymmetric, DIP, Arthritis Mutilans, Polyarthritis, Spondylitis):
- Asymmetric Oligoarthritis: Affects ≤4 joints, often large, asymmetrically.
⭐ Most common PsA pattern, affects ~50%.
- Symmetric Polyarthritis: ≥5 joints symmetrically, RA-like, RF-neg.
- DIP Predominant: Primarily Distal Interphalangeal joints; nail changes common.
- Arthritis Mutilans: Rare (<5%), severe, deforming; marked osteolysis ('pencil-in-cup').
- Spondylitis/Axial: Sacroiliitis and/or spondylitis; HLA-B27 positive. May occur alone.
- Asymmetric Oligoarthritis: Affects ≤4 joints, often large, asymmetrically.
- Key Features:
- Dactylitis: 'Sausage digits' - diffuse swelling of entire finger/toe.

- Enthesitis: Inflammation at tendon/ligament insertions (Achilles, plantar fascia).
- Nail Changes: Pitting, onycholysis, oil drop sign, subungual hyperkeratosis (in ~80%).
- Dactylitis: 'Sausage digits' - diffuse swelling of entire finger/toe.
Diagnosis & Investigations - PsA Detective Kit
- CASPAR Criteria: Requires inflammatory articular disease + ≥3 points from:
- Psoriasis: Current skin/scalp (2 pts); OR Personal history (1 pt); OR Family history (1st/2nd degree) (1 pt)
- Nail lesions (pitting, onycholysis, hyperkeratosis): 1 pt
- Dactylitis (current/history): 1 pt
- RF negativity (non-latex method, < lab ULN): 1 pt
- Juxta-articular new bone (X-ray hands/feet, not osteophytes): 1 pt
- Lab Findings:
- ↑ ESR, ↑ CRP (non-specific)
- RF usually negative (distinguishes from RA)
- Anti-CCP usually negative
⭐ RF negativity is a key feature distinguishing PsA (a seronegative spondyloarthropathy) from Rheumatoid Arthritis.
- Imaging:
- X-ray: "Pencil-in-cup" deformity, erosions, ankylosis, periostitis, asymmetric sacroiliitis.

- MRI/US: Early enthesitis, synovitis detection.
- X-ray: "Pencil-in-cup" deformity, erosions, ankylosis, periostitis, asymmetric sacroiliitis.
Treatment Strategies - Inflammation Takedown
- Goals: ↓ Inflammation, prevent joint damage, ↑ function & QoL.
- Non-Pharmacological: Patient education, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, weight management.
- Pharmacological Approach:
- NSAIDs: Initial for mild pain/stiffness.
- csDMARDs (Methotrexate, Sulfasalazine, Leflunomide):
- Key for peripheral arthritis. MTX often anchor drug.
- bDMARDs: For moderate-severe PsA, axial disease, enthesitis, or dactylitis.
- TNF inhibitors (e.g., Adalimumab, Infliximab): Often 1st line biologic.
- IL-17 inhibitors (e.g., Secukinumab, Ixekizumab).
- IL-12/23 inhibitors (e.g., Ustekinumab).
- tsDMARDs (JAK inhibitors, e.g., Tofacitinib, Upadacitinib): If bDMARDs inadequate/contraindicated.
- Domain-Specific Notes:
- Axial Disease: NSAIDs → bDMARDs (TNF-i, IL-17i). csDMARDs generally ineffective.
- Enthesitis/Dactylitis: NSAIDs, local steroid injections → bDMARDs.
⭐ TNF inhibitors are frequently the first-line biologic agents for severe Psoriatic Arthritis, especially if other systemic therapies are insufficient or contraindicated.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA) is a seronegative spondyloarthropathy often linked with HLA-B27, especially in axial disease.
- Hallmark features include dactylitis (sausage digits) and enthesitis (inflammation at tendon/ligament insertion).
- Classic X-ray finding: "pencil-in-cup" deformity, often at DIP joints, alongside erosions and new bone formation.
- Most common pattern is asymmetric oligoarthritis; Distal Interphalangeal (DIP) joint involvement is characteristic.
- Skin and nail psoriasis (e.g., pitting, onycholysis) usually precedes arthritis, sometimes by years.
- Management includes NSAIDs, DMARDs (methotrexate is a cornerstone), and biologics (e.g., anti-TNF agents) for moderate-severe disease.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app